From: Mark <mark@lochard.com.au>
To: remailer-operators@c2.org
Message Hash: b035a86ae5c31838d8d5fe5411a871e9b81ea37ebac632d7ccc4e2dfe3b59f2a
Message ID: <199510231159.AA11017@junkers.lochard.com.au>
Reply To: <199510230707.DAA22204@opine.cs.umass.edu>
UTC Datetime: 1995-10-23 14:14:48 UTC
Raw Date: Mon, 23 Oct 95 07:14:48 PDT
From: Mark <mark@lochard.com.au>
Date: Mon, 23 Oct 95 07:14:48 PDT
To: remailer-operators@c2.org
Subject: Re: require for new remailer list tag?
In-Reply-To: <199510230707.DAA22204@opine.cs.umass.edu>
Message-ID: <199510231159.AA11017@junkers.lochard.com.au>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text
>I'm curious about the potential sociological effects of such a move. I
>imagine that pseudonyms would be attracted to "permanent" remailers for
>use in their reply chains. But this phenomenon could/should be mitigated by
>the possibility that sting remailers would tend to advertise themselves as
>"permanent" (truthfully, even !), in anticipation of the bias in pseudonym
>remailer chain inclusion.
Personally I would be attracted to a fly-by-night remailer that was only up
for a short period of time. This is based on the [reasonable] assumption that
when the remailer is taken down, then any existing logfiles are also toasted.
A 30 minute remailer could exist by advertising in a known pool of billboards,
advertising it's service, free or for cyberbucks for the next 30 minutes
only. People wishing to send anon email would scan the current remailers,
do a nym check for a superficial check of reliable message delivery, then
negotiate with the mailer to ensure it is still accepting, and then deliver
the message. Less than 30 minutes later the remailer is gone and your message
is queued up or sent as per the contract.
Any LEA/monitor/Co$ would have a hard time trying to suppoena records from
a program that removed all traces of itself within minutes of it running.
If the mail isnt delivered you can choose to bad bad on the nym to the
relevant nym rating services. If it is you can allocate kudos to the nym's
good name.
You could use the "2 cyberbucks for 30 minutes" remailer as your front end
into the pool or the final delivery point or whatever your preference.
People could start off their day in the morning by clicking to download a
remailer (suitably signed) to their machine for a bit of cash earnings during
the time they will be away in a meeting. Heck java could do this =). No need
to worry about lunch money, get your machine to earn it.
You get the idea. Old and reliable isnt always what you want... too easy to
watch.
Cheers,
Mark
mark@lochard.com.au
The above opinions are rumoured to be mine.
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